Angels Too Soon

"It was 45 years ago, its really five minutes to me. I can hear the sounds. I can hear every sound. I heard voices, but yet it was quiet. I heard people yelling, I heard noises from people falling and jumping, but yet it was quiet. I heard fire trucks, but yet it was quiet. That's the way I hear it now." -John Raymond

On December 1, 1958, it was a cold and clear day as 1,600 students walked to Our Lady of the Angels school on Chicago's West Side. At the end of the day, as students waited for the final bell, a fire raged unnoticed in the northeast stairwell. By the time they become aware of it, the second floor hallway was filled with smoke, and six classrooms of fourth through eighth graders were trapped. Within minutes, 92 students and three nuns were dead. WTTW11’s Emmy-winning Chicago Stories series launches its 2003 season with Angels Too Soon, an unforgettable story of ordinary people caught up in a mind-numbing disaster. Told through vivid first-hand accounts and stunning archival footage, Angels Too Soon is also the story of a mystery that remains unsolved, despite the detailed confession of a 10-year-old student in the school.

Angels Too Soon, narrated by John Callaway and produced by Jay Shefsky, also seeks to answer some painful questions: How did this terrible catastrophe happen? How could it have been averted? And who should bear responsibility for unsafe conditions in the school?
The story of the fire itself is told through the recollections of those who survived it, those who fought it and those who reported on it. Angels Too Soon includes 16mm movie footage of the fire as well as poignant home movies and unforgettable still photos. By sheer coincidence, a film cameraman happened to be riding along with a Chicago fire truck when they were called to the school to fight the blaze. The result was crystal clear color footage, most of which has never been broadcast.

Every year on December 1st, local news remembers the tragedy with brief tributes. Angels Too Soon is the first full-length documentary to tell this important story.

Viewers will learn that while the Cook County Coroner’s Inquest investigated the fire without assigning blame, the report of the National Fire Protection Association was harshly critical of “those in authority.” The program also explores the stunning confession of a ten-year-old student at the school, and the judge’s decision to find the boy innocent. We learn of the fire’s lasting effect on survivors and their families in this close-knit community. Many of those students who escaped faced a long and painful recovery from their injuries in the hospital; we hear their courageous and inspiring stories, and how they dealt with the emotional trauma.

Angels Too Soon calls into question one of the most persistent stories of the fire: the charge that nuns endangered their students by insisting that they pray, rather than escape.

Also addressed is the responsibility for conditions at the school that may have worsened the outcome of the fire. Hal Bruno, later a prominent political journalist with ABC News, was one of the first reporters on the scene. “We went down to the basement. And it was like a textbook version of how a fire spreads,” Bruno remembered. “And up at the top of the second floor, there was the killer -- an open stairwell. So regardless of what caused the fire, if there had been a fire door at the top of those stairs, nobody would have died.” We learn that a shocking number of other schools – both public and parochial – were similarly ill-equipped. We also hear about the improvements that were made to fire safety in wake of the tragedy.

Monthly fire drills became a fact of life for Chicago schoolchildren. Many schools were fitted with sprinklers, and all schools were given fire alarms directly connected to the fire department.

Two years later, a new Our Lady of the Angels school was built on the site of the old one, and this new structure had all the state of the art fire safety features that were missing in the old building.

Soon after the fire, the head of the National Fire Protection Association was asked what had been learned from the tragedy at Our Lady of the Angels. He responded that there were no new lessons to be learned. Only old lessons that tragically went unheeded.

Additional Resources - Our Lady of the Angels fireOlafire.com - Based in Colorado, this site offers a wealth of information and resources related to the fire, including maps, photos, newspaper clippings and personal stories.

Angels of Fire - A CD of music inspired by the Our Lady of Angels fire. Michael Mason, himself a survivor of Our Lady of the Angels school fire and now a Downers Grove Firefighter/Paramedic, has assembled an international band of jazz musicians for the production of this CD, which is dedicated to his classmates who perished in the tragedy. All profits go to the Illinois Fire Safety Alliance and the IFSA Burn Camp for Children.

Friends of Our Lady of the Angels  This organization has sponsored support groups and memorial masses for members of the OLA community. For more information, lorraineking47@aol.com or write to:

Friends of OLA
c/o M. Krauss
3712 N. Nora Avenue
Chicago, IL 60634

Fire SafetySparky the Firedog - Great fire safety site for kids and families. Created by the National Fire Protection Association.

Illinois Fire Safety Alliance - Created to bring together persons or groups with a common interest in fire safety, burn prevention, and public education, and to promote programs and disseminate information related to fire safety and burn prevention.

David Baldwin's Trauma Information Page - This site is primarily for clinicians and researchers in the traumatic-stress field. It focuses on emotional trauma and traumatic stress, including PTSD (Post-traumatic Stress Disorder), whether following individual traumatic experience(s) or a large-scale disaster.

Angels Too Soon

"It was 45 years ago, its really five minutes to me. I can hear the sounds. I can hear every sound. I heard voices, but yet it was quiet. I heard people yelling, I heard noises from people falling and jumping, but yet it was quiet. I heard fire trucks, but yet it was quiet. That's the way I hear it now." -John Raymond

On December 1, 1958, it was a cold and clear day as 1,600 students walked to Our Lady of the Angels school on Chicago's West Side. At the end of the day, as students waited for the final bell, a fire raged unnoticed in the northeast stairwell. By the time they become aware of it, the second floor hallway was filled with smoke, and six classrooms of fourth through eighth graders were trapped. Within minutes, 92 students and three nuns were dead. WTTW11’s Emmy-winning Chicago Stories series launches its 2003 season with Angels Too Soon, an unforgettable story of ordinary people caught up in a mind-numbing disaster. Told through vivid first-hand accounts and stunning archival footage, Angels Too Soon is also the story of a mystery that remains unsolved, despite the detailed confession of a 10-year-old student in the school.

Angels Too Soon, narrated by John Callaway and produced by Jay Shefsky, also seeks to answer some painful questions: How did this terrible catastrophe happen? How could it have been averted? And who should bear responsibility for unsafe conditions in the school?
The story of the fire itself is told through the recollections of those who survived it, those who fought it and those who reported on it. Angels Too Soon includes 16mm movie footage of the fire as well as poignant home movies and unforgettable still photos. By sheer coincidence, a film cameraman happened to be riding along with a Chicago fire truck when they were called to the school to fight the blaze. The result was crystal clear color footage, most of which has never been broadcast.

Every year on December 1st, local news remembers the tragedy with brief tributes. Angels Too Soon is the first full-length documentary to tell this important story.

Viewers will learn that while the Cook County Coroner’s Inquest investigated the fire without assigning blame, the report of the National Fire Protection Association was harshly critical of “those in authority.” The program also explores the stunning confession of a ten-year-old student at the school, and the judge’s decision to find the boy innocent. We learn of the fire’s lasting effect on survivors and their families in this close-knit community. Many of those students who escaped faced a long and painful recovery from their injuries in the hospital; we hear their courageous and inspiring stories, and how they dealt with the emotional trauma.

Angels Too Soon calls into question one of the most persistent stories of the fire: the charge that nuns endangered their students by insisting that they pray, rather than escape.

Also addressed is the responsibility for conditions at the school that may have worsened the outcome of the fire. Hal Bruno, later a prominent political journalist with ABC News, was one of the first reporters on the scene. “We went down to the basement. And it was like a textbook version of how a fire spreads,” Bruno remembered. “And up at the top of the second floor, there was the killer -- an open stairwell. So regardless of what caused the fire, if there had been a fire door at the top of those stairs, nobody would have died.” We learn that a shocking number of other schools – both public and parochial – were similarly ill-equipped. We also hear about the improvements that were made to fire safety in wake of the tragedy.

Monthly fire drills became a fact of life for Chicago schoolchildren. Many schools were fitted with sprinklers, and all schools were given fire alarms directly connected to the fire department.

Two years later, a new Our Lady of the Angels school was built on the site of the old one, and this new structure had all the state of the art fire safety features that were missing in the old building.

Soon after the fire, the head of the National Fire Protection Association was asked what had been learned from the tragedy at Our Lady of the Angels. He responded that there were no new lessons to be learned. Only old lessons that tragically went unheeded.

Additional Resources - Our Lady of the Angels fireOlafire.com - Based in Colorado, this site offers a wealth of information and resources related to the fire, including maps, photos, newspaper clippings and personal stories.

Angels of Fire - A CD of music inspired by the Our Lady of Angels fire. Michael Mason, himself a survivor of Our Lady of the Angels school fire and now a Downers Grove Firefighter/Paramedic, has assembled an international band of jazz musicians for the production of this CD, which is dedicated to his classmates who perished in the tragedy. All profits go to the Illinois Fire Safety Alliance and the IFSA Burn Camp for Children.

Friends of Our Lady of the Angels  This organization has sponsored support groups and memorial masses for members of the OLA community. For more information, lorraineking47@aol.com or write to:

Friends of OLA
c/o M. Krauss
3712 N. Nora Avenue
Chicago, IL 60634

Fire SafetySparky the Firedog - Great fire safety site for kids and families. Created by the National Fire Protection Association.

Illinois Fire Safety Alliance - Created to bring together persons or groups with a common interest in fire safety, burn prevention, and public education, and to promote programs and disseminate information related to fire safety and burn prevention.

David Baldwin's Trauma Information Page - This site is primarily for clinicians and researchers in the traumatic-stress field. It focuses on emotional trauma and traumatic stress, including PTSD (Post-traumatic Stress Disorder), whether following individual traumatic experience(s) or a large-scale disaster.

WTTW’s Emmy award-winning program about the fire at Our Lady of the Angels school is now available on DVD. This program tells the unforgettable story of ordinary people caught up in a mind-numbing disaster. Add it to your collection now.